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TEXAS HOLDEM CASH GAMES

Texas Holdem & 

Internet Poker Book - The Poker Mindset

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  • About the Author
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Internet Texas Holdem : About the Author - Matthew Hilger
Internet Texas Holdem  :  About the Author - Matthew Hilger

Matthew Hilger quit his job to play poker on the Internet. In 1999 that shocked most people. Within 2 years, Matthew had authored a definitive book on Internet Poker, helping to usher in this international phenomenom

Regarded as both a pioneer & a leading author on the subject of Internet Poker. On top of publishing 3 Poker Books, Matthew writes columns for top poker periodicals such as CardPlayer & is tapped as an industry expert by periodicals such as the Wall Street Journal. Read More About Matthew Hilger

The Poker Mindset: Essential Attitudes for Poker Success
The Poker Mindset:  Essential Attitudes for Poker Success

The Poker Mindset: Essential Attitudes for Poker Success by Ian Taylor, aka Piemaster and myself is on schedule for a mid-March release. At the risk of sounding too self-promoting, I can honestly say that for some players this will be the most important poker book that they ever read. As the sub-title suggests, a good understanding of the concepts in this book is essential if you want to succeed in poker. Players at all levels ought to gain new insights from the book, or at least reinforce ideas that they already have. Continue to Book Synopsis

Texas Holdem Odds & Probabilities
Texas Holdem Odds & Probabilities

  • 1. How often does each starting hand win against a specific hand or random hand?
  • 2. What are the odds of your opponent holding a pocket pair when he raises?
  • 3. What is the probability that an over-card will flop when you hold JJ?
  • 4. How do you determine if drawing is profitable or not?
Texas Hold'em Odds and Probabilities answers all of these questions and more. Every single decision you make at the poker table is in some way related to odds and probabilities.

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Internet Texas Holdem : Winning Strategies from an Internet Pro
Internet Texas Holdem : Winning Strategies from an Internet Pro

A comprehensive overview of Texas Holdem is presented including general poker concepts such as probability and odds, bluffing, raising and check-raising. Various deceptive tactics are also discussed such as free cards, slowplaying, and inducing bluffs and calls. You'll learn the correct strategies for starting hand play as well as playing on the flop, turn, and river. You'll learn the intricacies of playing on the Internet and the differences in strategies between Internet and live play. Finally, you'll be able to practice all of these strategies on over 200 actual Internet hands.

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A Look at Backdoor-Flush Draws Print E-mail
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Texas Holdem Poker Strategy
Written by Matthew Hilger   

A backdoor draw is one in which you need to hit a card on both the turn and river to improve your hand. For example, you hold the Ac 4c and the flop is Qs 9c 6d. A club on the turn and the river would give you a flush. Backdoor draws are of little value by themselves, as you rarely are getting sufficient implied pot odds to draw solely on the merits of a backdoor draw; however, sometimes they add just enough value to your hand to draw when you have other outs, such as overcards or bottom pair and an overcard. I often hear people at the poker table say, “I had middle pair and a backdoor-flush draw.” Backdoor-flush draws should rarely impact your strategy, yet I frequently hear players talking about them.

Let’s first look at why backdoor draws by themselves are weak. To make a backdoor-flush draw, you first need to hit your suit on the turn, which is 10/47, and then hit it again on the river, which is 9/46. Multiplying these together produces .042, or 4.2 percent, which is about 23-to-1. Those aren’t very good odds!

Also realize that backdoor draws require you to hit two cards, so you will often need to pay a bet on both the flop and the turn. Therefore, you need even better than 23-to-1 implied pot odds on the flop to justify calling when you include the cost of the turn bet.

Let’s look at this in more detail:
• Assume you are in a $1-$2 limit game and are faced with a $1 bet on the flop, which will close the betting.

• To complete your draw, you will most likely need to call a turn bet, also, so it is important to look at your implied pot odds.

• Since you will sometimes be folding on the turn, we can estimate your average risk. You will continue your draw about 20 percent of the time on the turn (10/47). Therefore, your average total investment is $1 + (0.20 × $2) = $1.40 (the actual investment is slightly higher, since you face the possibility of a raise on the turn).

• To justify this investment, you need a pot of approximately 23 × $1.4, which is $32. You should call on the flop only if you expect to win at least $32 (assuming that you have no other draws).

You would need to be in a capped pot preflop with several opponents to even have a chance of getting close to a pot that big. These types of pots are extremely rare, and even when they do occur, you will need to be closing the betting or you will run the risk of a raise behind you, given all that action. Realize that whatever limit you are playing, you can use the 32-to-1 implied pot odds that we calculated above as the basis for the number of small bets you need to win to make a backdoor-flush draw. If you were playing $10-$20, you would need an expected pot of $320. In $20-$40, you would need an expected pot of $640, and so forth. The math is shown here to demonstrate that backdoor-flush draws have little merit unless you have some other draws to add to them.

There are times when a backdoor-flush draw can turn a fold into a call, but it is also important to realize that there are two different types of backdoor-flush draws, one of which is more valuable than the other:

1. You hold two cards of the same suit in your hand and one hits the flop. For example, you hold the Ac 10c with a flop of Kc 7s 3h.

2. You hold one suit in your hand and two of the same suit hit the flop. For example, you hold the Ac 10s with a flop of Kc 7c 3h.

Note how the first is more valuable than the second. In the first scenario, your flush is concealed if you happen to hit it. In many cases, you’ll be able to get in a nice raise or reraise on the river.

There are several problems and risks with the second type of backdoor-flush draw, in which you hold only one card of the suit in your hand:

• The first problem is that there will be three cards of the same suit on the turn. If one of your opponents hits a flush, there could be some raising and/or reraising, making your draw to the river more expensive.

• If you do manage to hit your flush, there will be four cards of the same suit on the river. You are unlikely to get a lot of action unless you are up against a very weak opponent.

• Also realize that these types of draws have close to no value unless you are drawing to the nuts or close to it. I would place no value on a draw to the third-best flush when you hold only one card of the suit. Your draw is already 23-to-1 to complete, so you don’t want to hit it and lose. For example, you hold the Qc 10h and the flop comes 6c 3c 2s. Your backdoor draw to the Qc is quite weak, given that anyone holding the Ac or Kc would beat you. Compare this to the first type of backdoor-flush draw, in which an opponent would need two cards matching the same suit to beat you.

Most players consider backdoor draws too frequently in their decision-making process. Hopefully, this column has shown some of the drawbacks. Even in those cases in which you are trying to justify a call, note that you won’t get a lot of value out of backdoor draws when you hold only one card of the backdoor-flush suit in your hand.

 
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